On 10/01/2012 12:48 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
On 10/01/12 14:17, Boyko Bantchev wrote:
In my personal opinion, saying that "Vim's learning curve is steep"
is nothing but a gross exaggeration.  Why should it be?  Are Vim's
potential users computer illiterates, incapable of adapting to simple
albeit new concepts?

I'm pretty sure it stems on how productive one can be when
confronted with the editor without any previous experience.

A newbie user can approach Nano and see the "these are the things
you can do" at the bottom, as well as how to obtain help; or Notepad
and see that it offers the standard File/Edit/Help menu options to
click on.  In both, typing does exactly what is expected:  it enters
text.


But the thing is, for the kind of users vim is aimed at, a text editor isn't the kind of tool that is used so infrequently that the user is always stuck at the newbie stage.

I think there's a place for "user-friendly" or "intuitively obvious" applications, but it's for things that you don't use every day and therefore don't have a chance to develop any "muscle memory" or other expertise. A disk recovery app, for example, needs that kind of interface because it's aimed at a problem that hopefully doesn't come up very often. But when it does we're already frustrated and don't want to have to learn how to use an arcane piece of software.

A software developer, on the other hand, spends a large portion of his time in his text editor. It's his "home base." What Alan Cooper once called a "sovereign app." With apps like that, what's wanted is an interface that doesn't insist on calling attention to itself, but instead recedes into the background so the user can focus all of his attention on the task. Otherwise it's like trying to play the piano while looking at your hands instead of the sheetmusic (or hearing the song in your head.)

People who don't work with text all that much or very often can be quite content with Nano, Notepad, or even simpler interfaces. You don't need vim to send text messages or tweets!

But other people find those "user-friendly" apps too confining, and almost as awkward to use as an on-screen keyboard to be pecked at with a stylus.

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